Newsroom · Moab
The 2026 Part D $2,100 Cap: What Moab Seniors Should Know
For the first time, there's a hard yearly ceiling on what covered prescriptions can cost you out of pocket — here's how the 2026 numbers work, in plain English.
The bottom line
- In 2026, your out-of-pocket costs for covered Part D drugs are capped at $2,100 for the year — after that, you pay $0 cost sharing for covered drugs.
- The cap counts your deductible, copays, and coinsurance — not your monthly premium, and not drugs your plan doesn't cover.
- The standard 2026 deductible is up to $615; after that you pay 25% coinsurance until you hit the cap.
- The Medicare Prescription Payment Plan can spread big early-year costs into monthly payments — it doesn't lower your total, but it smooths it.
- With 33.3% of Grand County adults managing high blood pressure and 11.2% diabetes, formulary fit decides whether the cap actually protects you — check your exact drug list.
If you have Medicare drug coverage in 2026, you cannot be required to pay more than $2,100 out of pocket for covered Part D prescriptions this year. That cap — created by the Inflation Reduction Act and set at $2,100 for 2026 by CMS — changes the math for anyone in Moab or Grand County managing ongoing prescriptions. Here's how the benefit is structured now, what counts toward the cap, and how to make sure your plan actually delivers that protection.
How does Part D work in 2026?
The 2026 defined standard Part D benefit has three phases. Whatever plan you have — stand-alone Part D or a Medicare Advantage plan with drug coverage — this is the frame underneath it:
| Phase | What you pay | Your share |
|---|---|---|
| Deductible | You pay 100% of covered drug costs until you meet the deductible (up to $615 in 2026). | You pay most |
| Initial coverage | You pay 25% coinsurance for covered drugs. Your plan, drug manufacturers, and Medicare pay the rest. | You pay 25% |
| Catastrophic (after the cap) | Once your out-of-pocket spending reaches $2,100, you pay $0 cost sharing for covered Part D drugs for the rest of the year. | You pay $0 |
Source: CMS: Final CY 2026 Part D Redesign Program Instructions.
All four figures: CMS, Final CY 2026 Part D Redesign Program Instructions.
What counts toward the $2,100 — and what doesn't?
The cap tracks your true out-of-pocket spending on covered drugs. Counting toward it: your deductible, copays, and coinsurance for drugs on your plan's formulary, plus most help you get from drug-manufacturer programs and the Extra Help program. Not counting toward it:
- Your monthly premium. You keep paying it after you reach the cap.
- Drugs your plan doesn't cover. Off-formulary purchases don't count — the single biggest reason to check your exact medication list against a plan before enrolling.
- Part B drugs. Medicines administered in a clinic or doctor's office (many infusions and injections) fall under Part B, not Part D.
Details and current rules are on Medicare.gov's drug-cost page.
What if I can't afford a big pharmacy bill in January?
A cap protects your whole year, but costs still arrive unevenly — a $615 deductible plus an expensive fill can front-load hundreds of dollars into the first weeks of the year. The Medicare Prescription Payment Plan exists for exactly this: every Part D plan must offer it, joining costs nothing, and it converts what you'd pay at the pharmacy counter into monthly bills from your plan spread across the calendar year. It does not reduce your total costs — it reschedules them. If your prescriptions are expensive early in the year, it can be the difference between a budget crisis and a predictable monthly amount. Learn more or opt in via Medicare.gov's Prescription Payment Plan page or your drug plan directly.
Managing multiple prescriptions in Moab?
Bring your medication list and we'll check it against the formularies of plans available in Grand County — so the $2,100 cap actually protects the drugs you take. Free, local, no pressure.
Review my drug coverage →Why does this matter so much in Grand County?
Ongoing conditions usually mean ongoing prescriptions — and that's exactly who a yearly cap protects. Here's the chronic-condition picture among Grand County adults:
Chronic-condition rates among Grand County adults
Source: CDC PLACES, 2023 — via the Medicare On Main Data Desk. Model-based prevalence among adults, 2023.
A third of Grand County adults manage high blood pressure and more than 1 in 10 manage diabetes — conditions that commonly involve multiple daily medications. For those households, the difference between a plan whose formulary covers your exact drugs (so every dollar counts toward the cap) and one that doesn't can be the whole ballgame.
Is 2026 also the year negotiated drug prices start?
Yes. 2026 is the first year the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program's negotiated prices take effect for the first group of selected drugs, and Part D plans are required to include those selected drugs on their formularies. If you take one of them, the negotiated price can lower what you spend before reaching the cap. Combined with the $2,100 ceiling and the monthly payment option, the 2026 benefit is meaningfully more protective than what existed just a few years ago — details in the CMS program instructions.
What should I actually do with this?
- List every prescription you take — name, dose, and pharmacy.
- Check each one against your plan's 2026 formulary. Only covered drugs count toward your $2,100 cap.
- If your costs bunch up early in the year, ask your plan about the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan.
- Watch your Annual Notice of Change this fall — formularies, tiers, and pharmacy networks shift every year, and the Annual Enrollment Period (Oct 15–Dec 7) is your window to switch.
- Get a local second opinion. A 30-minute review of your drug list against Grand County's plan options is free and can surface coverage differences that are hard to spot on your own.
How we know all this: the Medicare On Main Data Desk frames every article with public data — here, the 2026 Part D benefit parameters from CMS and county health figures from CDC PLACES (2023) — and qualitative guidance for anything (like specific plan premiums and formularies) that changes year to year. This is education, not advice; confirm your plan, costs, and eligibility with a licensed agent or Medicare.gov. We take no payment from any carrier to feature a plan.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Medicare Part D out-of-pocket cap for 2026?
In 2026, once your out-of-pocket spending on covered Part D drugs reaches $2,100, you pay $0 cost sharing for covered drugs for the rest of the calendar year. The cap was $2,000 in 2025 and is adjusted each year for drug-cost inflation — CMS set the 2026 threshold at $2,100. It applies whether your drug coverage comes from a stand-alone Part D plan or a Medicare Advantage plan that includes drugs.
Does the $2,100 cap include my premiums?
No. The cap counts what you pay out of pocket for covered Part D drugs — your deductible, copays, and coinsurance. It does not count your monthly plan premium, and it does not count drugs your plan doesn't cover or medicines covered under Part B (like many infused or clinic-administered drugs).
What is the Part D deductible in 2026?
Under the standard 2026 Part D benefit, the deductible is up to $615 — you pay full price for covered drugs until you meet it, then 25% coinsurance until your out-of-pocket spending reaches the $2,100 cap. Individual plans can charge a lower deductible than the standard amount, which is one reason plans with similar premiums can behave very differently at the pharmacy counter.
Can I spread my drug costs over the year instead of paying big bills early?
Yes. The Medicare Prescription Payment Plan is a free-to-join payment option (it doesn't lower your total costs) that every Part D plan must offer. Instead of paying the pharmacy directly, your plan bills you monthly, smoothing large early-year costs — like a January deductible plus expensive fills — into more predictable payments across the calendar year. You opt in through your drug plan.
Do negotiated drug prices start in 2026?
Yes. 2026 is the first year Medicare's negotiated prices take effect for the first group of selected high-spend drugs under the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program. If you take one of the selected drugs, your plan must include it on its formulary, and the negotiated price can lower what you pay before you reach the cap.
Does the cap matter for people in Moab with chronic conditions?
Very much. Per CDC PLACES (2023), among Grand County adults high blood pressure affects 33.3%, diabetes 11.2%, and obesity 28.2%. Conditions like these often mean multiple ongoing prescriptions, and the $2,100 cap puts a hard ceiling on what a year of covered medicines can cost you out of pocket — but only if your specific drugs are on your plan's formulary, which is exactly what a plan review checks.
Sources
- CMS: Final CY 2026 Part D Redesign Program Instructions — the 2026 out-of-pocket threshold ($2,100), deductible ($615), phase structure, and selected-drug rules.
- Medicare.gov: How much does Medicare drug coverage cost? — what counts toward the cap and current Part D cost rules.
- Medicare.gov: Medicare Prescription Payment Plan — the monthly payment option for spreading drug costs across the year.
- CDC PLACES: Local Data for Better Health, County 2023 — Grand County, UT chronic-condition prevalence (2023).
- Medicare Plan Compare (Medicare.gov) — every drug plan available in your county, with your drug list priced in.